Holiday Peppermint Bark

During the holiday season, I’ve always suffered from homemade gift envy until I realized just how easy it is to make something that looks, and tastes, like it took hours to create.

On the contrary, my latest batch of homemade gifts have taken less then 30 minutes to make (that’s less time than it would take to actually go out shopping for individual presents).  This year I made Honey Cranberry Butter for the teachers.  They were received with oohs and ahs, raised eyebrows and “oh my, look how beautiful.”  It’s all in the presentation.  They hadn’t event tasted the butter yet and I have no idea if their batches survived the two weeks in my fridge.

The second homemade gift, for the people who work in my apartment building is Peppermint Bark— it’s always a crowd-pleaser!

Again, this recipe is extremely easy to make and it tastes so sinfully extravagant.  Honestly, it’s just melting chocolate, crushing candy canes, layering them together and then refrigerating the chocolate until it hardens into a “bark.”  Any 4-year old has constructed something similar in nursery school.  No excuses.

Lucky for us we had a ton of candy canes left over from our apartment building holiday party last week.

Beautiful candy canes….before getting CRUSHED

We had a blast placing the canes in a zip loc bag and jumping up and down on the bag until the canes were broken up. (I wouldn’t recommend this if you live in an apartment with neighbors below.  The bag broke open in mid stomp and peppermint bits flew all over our kitchen floor).  Simply chopping the canes up in a food processor would suffice.  Just make sure you don’t chop them to much or the canes will turn into powder.  You want to use chunks to make your bark top nice and pretty and 3-D.

I noticed that many Peppermint Bark recipes recommend different forms of chocolate.  I decided to sample three different kinds.  I had Baker’s Semi-Sweet Chocolate Baking Squares in the pantry so I used them for my first batch.   The recipe calls for a double boiler to melt the chocolate.  I don’t have a double boiler nor was I about to buy another vessel to cram into my kitchen cabinet.  So, I made a make shift boiler with a sauce pan and a pyrex bowl that fit snuggly on top and was ready to melt away.

Chocolate melting in the make-shift double boiler

The Baker’s Chocolate melted perfectly, spread easily in the dish and hardened within 15 minutes in the fridge (contrary to the 1-hour suggested time in the recipe). I laughed when I read the recipe calls for “fine quality” white chocolate.  I simply picked up a container full of Vahlrona white chocolate disks on sale at Whole Foods.  These too melted easily, spread easily and hardened quickly. Make sure you don’t spread on the white chocolate layer until after the base chocolate layer has completely hardened or else the chocolate and white chocolate will mix together and your bark top won’t have that solid white contrast against the bright red swirls from the crushed canes.  When sprinkling the broken canes on top, my 10-year old said he felt like he was sprinkling glitter over a glue canvas.  I sure hoped it tasted better than that!

Sea of crushed peppermint canes atop melted chocolate

 

I kept the final bark in the fridge for a long time (over an hour) just to be safe.  When we were ready to break the bark, we flipped it upside down so that we were actually breaking with the bottom on top to try to preserve as many candy canes pieces as possible.  It’s a really messy job but, really fun.  Actually, it’s an ideal stress reliever if you’ve had a rough day.  We started breaking and breaking and breaking and the thicker the chocolate, the harder it was.  It did feel little strange to be so aggressive with the food.  But, the goal is to produce jagged pieces in a variety of sizes.

We sampled the bits that had spewed across the counter.  So good!  The batches with the peppermint extract had that extra zing of flavor.  We also agreed the batch with the milk chocolate morsels was too sweet; we’d stick with the semi-sweet chocolate.

The final product, packed and ready to go

We then packaged the bark pieces in little tins as if we were hastily throwing puzzle pieces back in their boxes. Organized chaos.

Our final product looked beautiful, and well thought out; like a true labor of peppermint bark love.

We felt accomplished and proud to be sharing homemade treats made from our very own home.

 

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  1. […] boiler at home so I created a make-shift one on the stove top that’s worked before when I made my Peppermint Bark for the holidays.  By accident I melted too much chocolate (I mean who wouldn’t) and got so […]

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